Lingua   

Strikers Line

Paul Arenson
Lingua: Inglese



Ti può interessare anche...

Hell, No, I Won't Go
(Paul Arenson)
Government Men
(Paul Arenson)


[1969]
Album: Tofu Spaghetti [2007]

"In the 1960s and 70s I grew to love British and Celtic music, both traditional as well as the working people's songs of Ewan McColl, Lew Killan and others. This was a song that I wrote around that time reflecting that.."
When I was just a lad and a little bitty lad
I heard the elders talking-o
About the coppers and the bosses and how they break the backs
Of all the working people-o…

Three died in the mines and the waiting widows wept
And the miners rallied in the union hall
Then they marched up the cobblestone streets with the dead
And the black mariahs (*) waiting round the bend.

"Go back to work, you bloody dogs
Or we will have your skins you know"
But the men cried «Never!» and the truncheon crack hard
On the skull of every worker-o

It's work for your supper and work for your bed
And work till your eyes are bloody red
Eight weary days of working and a rotten piece of bread
And you'll sure as hell be working till the day that you're dead.

Eight weary days of working and a rotten piece of bread…
..And you'll sure as hell be working till the day that you're dead.
Note

(*) Black mariahs or paddywagons, slang terms for prison vans.

inviata da giorgio - 4/1/2010 - 19:01




Pagina principale CCG

Segnalate eventuali errori nei testi o nei commenti a antiwarsongs@gmail.com




hosted by inventati.org